| Literature DB >> 10600217 |
C R Pawlak1, R Jacobs, E Mikeska, S Ochsmann, M S Lombardi, A Kavelaars, C J Heijnen, R E Schmidt, M Schedlowski.
Abstract
Clinical observations suggest that psychological stress induces exacerbation of disease activity in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). In order to determine whether SLE patients differ from healthy controls in their stress response, we analyzed heart rate, blood pressure, catecholamine concentration, lymphocyte subpopulations, natural killer (NK) cell activity, and expression of beta-adrenoceptors on PBMC before, immediately after, and 1 h after a public speaking task in 15 SLE patients and 15 healthy subjects. Both groups demonstrated similar psychological, cardiovascular, and neuroendocrine responses to acute stress. However, natural killer (CD16(+)/CD56(+)) cell numbers transiently increased after stress exposure, with significantly less pronounced changes in SLE patients. In addition, NK activity increased in healthy controls (n = 8) but not in SLE patients (n = 4) after acute stress. Furthermore, the number of beta(2)-adrenoceptors on PBMC significantly increased only in healthy subjects (n = 8) after stress but not in SLE patients (n = 7). These data indicate that SLE patients differ from healthy controls in stress-induced immune responses. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10600217 DOI: 10.1006/brbi.1999.0553
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Behav Immun ISSN: 0889-1591 Impact factor: 7.217